|
Showing 1 - 6 of
6 matches in All Departments
Lawyers and the Construction of Transnational Justice will show
students and scholars what it means in practice to talk about
building transnational justice - both on the side of economic
regulation and on the side of human rights and humanitarian law. It
links national and transnational processes, tracing the activities
of lawyers with their successful and less successful strategies to
build institutions and credibility for a transnational legal field.
Examples include developments in international criminal justice,
including the unsuccessful quest to establish universal
jurisdiction for the prosecution of human rights violators; the
very successful efforts to build transnational trade and
intellectual property regimes; and the relative success in building
a European legal field. The introductory and concluding chapters by
the co-editors, drawing on the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu, link
the chapters together and explore the possibilities for a more
institutionalized and unified transnational legal field - bridging
the economic and corporate side with the human rights and
humanitarian side.Addressing a range of international issues,
Lawyers and the Construction of Transnational Justice is a major
contribution to the field of sociology of law, as well as to
debates about global governance.
Lawyers and the Construction of Transnational Justice will show
students and scholars what it means in practice to talk about
building transnational justice both on the side of economic
regulation and on the side of human rights and humanitarian law. It
links national and transnational processes, tracing the activities
of lawyers with their successful and less successful strategies to
build institutions and credibility for a transnational legal field.
Examples include developments in international criminal justice,
including the unsuccessful quest to establish universal
jurisdiction for the prosecution of human rights violators; the
very successful efforts to build transnational trade and
intellectual property regimes; and the relative success in building
a European legal field. The introductory and concluding chapters by
the co-editors, drawing on the sociology of Pierre Bourdieu, link
the chapters together and explore the possibilities for a more
institutionalized and unified transnational legal field bridging
the economic and corporate side with the human rights and
humanitarian side. Addressing a range of international issues,
Lawyers and the Construction of Transnational Justice is a major
contribution to the field of sociology of law, as well as to
debates about global governance.
Lawyers and the Rule of Law in an Era of Globalization focuses on
the national and transnational processes transforming both the rule
of law and the role of lawyers. The book draws on a framework that
emphasizes the relationship between the national and the
international, the strategies of lawyers at various political
levels, and the circulation of ideas and people. As such, it
considers the 'rule of law', not as a normative ideal that has to
be accomplished and realized, but rather as a field of action and
discourse that emerges through complex relationships among experts,
national elites and global institutions. Through detailed empirical
work, the contributors all examine the relationship between law,
politics, and the state; focusing on lawyers and the social capital
they posses and deploy, in order to understand the efficacy of the
rule of law in different polities. Lawyers and the Rule of Law in
an Era of Globalization will be invaluable for socio-legal
scholars, students of the legal profession, as well as those with
interests in law and development studies.
This book, with contributors from nine countries, seeks to
critically understand the processes of legal education reform and
resistance and to point to what these processes mean for law and
lawyers inside and outside of the United States. The book seeks to
understand the forces driving these processes and to evaluate their
implications. Its substantive chapters provide critical insights
into how these transnational processes operate in different
jurisdictions around the world in light of globalization and local
competition. Taken together, the chapters show how institutions and
practices of legal education have historically moved across
jurisdictions and shaped legal education practices transnationally,
as well as the challenges and limits these processes have faced.
The chapters also show how that diffusion relates to empires and
imperial competition, and in particular today to the rise in power
of the United States after the Cold War-and the related diffusion
of neoliberal economic policies that have also fueled the spread of
corporate law firms modeled on the United States. The book shows
how local processes play and evolve in relation to global balances
of power. This is an open access title available under the terms of
a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence.
This book describes a century of tremendous legal change, of
inspiring legal developments, and profound failures. The twentieth
century took the United States from the Progressive Era's optimism
about law and social engineering to current concerns about a
hyperlegalistic society, from philosophical idealism to the
implementation of democracy, the rule of law, and the idea of human
rights throughout the world. At the same time, law maintained its
status as the key language of governance in the United States, the
most "legal" of all countries, which has succeeded in making its
version of the state a point of reference around the globe.
Lawyers and the Rule of Law in an Era of Globalization focuses on
the national and transnational processes transforming both the rule
of law and the role of lawyers. Drawing on detailed empirical work,
the contributors all examine the relationship between law,
politics, and the state; focusing on lawyers and the social capital
they posses and deploy, in order to understand the efficacy of the
rule of law in different polities.
|
You may like...
Fast X
Vin Diesel
Blu-ray disc
R210
R158
Discovery Miles 1 580
|